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2018 CrossFit Games
View on Wikipedia| 2018 CrossFit Games | |
|---|---|
| Venue | Alliant Energy Center |
| Location | Madison, Wisconsin |
| Dates | August 1–5, 2018 |
| Champions | |
| Men | Mathew Fraser |
| Women | Tia-Clair Toomey |
| Team | CrossFit Mayhem Freedom |
The 2018 CrossFit Games was the 12th CrossFit Games and held on August 1–5, 2018, at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, United States.[1] The men's competition was won by Mathew Fraser, the women's by Tia-Clair Toomey, and CrossFit Mayhem Freedom won the Affiliate Cup.[2]
A record number of entries was reported for this year's Open, with over 415,000 athletes registering to compete.[3] The Regionals were adjusted this year to reflect the growth of the sport worldwide.[4] Both Fraser and Toomey dominated the Games,[5] with Fraser extending his record margin of victory to 220 over the runner-up Patrick Vellner.[6]
Qualification
[edit]Open
[edit]The 2018 CrossFit Open was a high point in terms of participation; it recorded the highest number of athletes, at over 415,000, who registered to compete in the Open.[7] Across all age divisions, 429,157 took part in and completed at least one workout.[8] There were six scored event in five weeks (the second workout was split into two scored events – 18.2 and 18.2a).[8] The Open took place from February 22 through March 26.[9] Mat Fraser and Cassidy Lance-Mcwherter were the respective man and woman winner of the Open.[10] Fraser's points total of 97 was 343 points lower than that of the second place finisher Alex Vigneault, the biggest margin of victory in the Open's history.[11]
Regionals
[edit]The Regionals were adjusted this year to reflect the growth of the sport worldwide; the number of Regionals was increased from eight to nine,[4] and athletes from 18 regions were funnelled into the nine Regionals.[12] Latin America that was previously merged with a US Regional was given its own Regional, while Regionals in the US were reorganized down to five, and Europe was split into two (Europe and Meridian).[13] The number of qualifiers to the Games, however, remained the same: 40 men, 40 women and 40 teams.[12] The Regionals took place over three weekends from May 18 through June 3, 2018.[9] The Regionals were streamed live on CBSSports.com.[14]
Individual
[edit]Wednesday, August 1, 2018
[edit]Event 1: Crit
[edit]- Bike 10 laps for time, approximately 1200 meters per lap.[15]
Athletes competed in a criterium race on bicycles with all competing athletes on the track simultaneously.[16] Patrick Vellner crashed in the event, and finished in 35th place.[17] The event was won by Adrian Mundwiler the men's heat and Kristin Holte for the women's heat.
Event 2: 30 Muscle-ups
[edit]The athletes performed 30 muscle-ups on gymnastic rings as fast as possible.[15] The event was won by Logan Collins and Kristi Eramo.
Event 3: CrossFit Total
[edit]- One lift of a maximum weight for a back squat
- One lift of a maximum weight for a shoulder press
- One lift of a maximum weight for a deadlift
Athletes had four minutes to make three attempts at each lift for the heaviest weight. The winning score was the cumulative total of the three heaviest weights in each lift.[18] Sara Sigmundsdottir fractured her rib during the warm-up for this event, but continued competing for this and the following events, eventually had to withdraw from the competition before event 10.[19] The event was won by Royce Dunne (100 kg shoulder press, and 213 kg back squat, and 256 kg deadlift) for the men and by Tia-Clair Toomey (150 kg back squat, and 58 kg shoulder press, and 188 kg deadlift) for the women.[20]
Event 4: Marathon Row
[edit]The competitors used a Concept-2 rowing machine to accumulate 42,195 meters, the distance of a marathon, as fast as possible. The event was won by Lukas Esslinger with a time of 2 hours, 43 minutes, 50 seconds and Margaux Alvarez at 3 hours, 0 minutes, 42 seconds.[21]
Friday, August 3, 2018
[edit]Event 5: The Battleground
[edit]For time while wearing a weighted vest:
- Rescue Randy drag
- Two rope climbs
- Obstacle course run
- Two rope climbs
- Rescue Randy drag
Competitors started by dragging "Rescue Randy", a weighted rescue training mannequin,[22] across the stadium. After the drag, they climbed two 20-foot (6.1-meter) ropes, each with a different diameter. They then ran a course with eight obstacles consisting of cargo net climbs, wall climbs, monkey bars, rope swings, and log balances. The competitors then returned to the rope climbs and dummy drag.
At the event, both Mat Fraser and Patrick Vellner fell off the cargo net, with Vellner bruising his lungs and required medical attention after the race.[23] The event was won by Cole Sager and Laura Horváth.
Event 6: Clean and Jerk Speed Ladder
[edit]The event consists of three rounds of five progressively heavier clean and jerks. The men start at 245 pounds (111 kilograms) and the women start at 155 pounds (70 kilograms). The top 20 athletes to finish the five lifts in quarterfinal round with a one-minute time cap move on to the semifinal round. With a two-minute cap and five heavier barbells, the top five competitors move on to the final round. The final round has the five athletes progress through five heavier weights as fast as possible, or as heaviest weight they can lift in the three-minute time cap. The event was won by Nicholas Urankar and Amanda Barnhart.
Event 7: Fibonacci
[edit]- 5 parallette handstand push-ups
- 5 deadlifts with two kettlebells
- 8 parallette handstand push-ups
- 8 kettlebell deadlifts
- 13 parallette handstand push-ups
- 13 kettlebell deadlifts
- 89-foot overhead lunge with two kettlebells
A repeat of the final event of the previous year, with only a change to women's event to make it match the number of movements as the men. The previous year, Logan Collins was the only man to finish the event (with a time of 5:29:09), while 27 women finished with the lower quantity of handstand push-ups.[24] The parallettes are 14 inches (36 centimeters) for the men and 8 inches (20 centimeters) for the women. The men use 203-pound (92-kilogram) kettlebells for the deadlifts and 53-pound (24-kilogram) kettlebells for the lunges. The women use 124-pound (56-kilogram) kettlebells for the deadlifts and 35-pound (16-kilogram) kettlebells for the lunges. All must be done with a six-minute time cap.
The event was won by Mat Fraser, who had taken second in the event the previous year, and Katrín Davíðsdóttir. Four men finished the 2018 event, including previous finisher Logan Collins, and 23 women finished the updated version of the event.
Saturday, August 4, 2018
[edit]Event 8: Madison Triplus
[edit]- Swim 500 meters
- Paddle on a paddleboard for 1000 meters
- Run 2000 meters
The event was won by Dean Linder-Leighton and Tia-Clair Toomey.
Event 9: Chaos
[edit]- 35/30 calories on a SkiErg
- 30/25 burpees with a set height target at the top
- 45/40 single-arm dumbbell overhead squats
- 40/45 alternating single-leg squats
- 25 box jump-overs
- 110-foot (34-meter) tumbler pull
This event was designed so that the athletes did not know the quantity or movement going into each station. On the SkiErg, burpees, and squats, the athletes were told to move to the next station only when they reached the specified quantity. They were told the quantity of box jumps once they reached the box. The men, who went second on the event, were sequestered so that they could not find out the movements.
The quantities varied between the men's and women's event. The men had 35 calories on the SkiErg, a machine built by Concept2 similar to their rowing machines but meant to simulate a cross-country skiing motion, and the women had 30. The burpees had 30 repetitions for the men and 25 for the women, as well as a higher target for the men. For the dumbbell overhead squats, the men had 45 while the women had 40 repetitions with a 50-pound (23-kilogram) and 35-pound (16-kilogram) dumbbell respectively. On the single-leg squats, the men had 40 while the women had 45. Both sexes had 25 box jumps, but the height for the women was 36 inches (91 centimeters) while the men had 42-inch (110-centimeter) tall boxes. The tumbler was a sand-filled barrel, 400 pounds (180 kilograms) and 300 pounds (140 kilograms) for the men and women respectively, attached to straps.
The event was won by Patrick Vellner and Katrín Davíðsdóttir.
Events 10 and 11: Bicouplet 1 and 2
[edit]- Bicouplet 2
- 12 snatches
- 12 bar muscle-ups
- 9 snatches
- 9 bar muscle-ups
- 6 snatches
- 6 bar muscle-ups
—Rest—
- Bicouplet 1
- 21 snatches
- 21 chest-to-bar pull-ups
- 15 snatches
- 15 chest-to-bar pull-ups
- 9 snatches
- 9 chest-to-bar pull-ups
Each heat performed events 10 and 11 back-to-back with a short rest in between. The order of the two events was voted on by fans to decide if Bicouplet 1 or 2 would be performed first with Bicouplet 2 becoming chosen as event 10. The snatch weight for Bicouplet 2 was 135 pounds (61 kilograms) for men and 85 pounds (39 kilograms) for women. The snatch weight for Bicouplet 1 was 85 pounds (39 kilograms) for men and 55 pounds (25 kilograms) for women.
Event 10, Bicouplet 2, was won by Willy Georges and Camille Leblanc-Bazinet . Event 11, Bicouplet 1, was won by Rasmus Andersen and Kara Saunders.
Sunday, August 5, 2018
[edit]Event 12: Two-Stroke Pull
[edit]Five rounds of:
- 300-meter run
- Assault Bike for calories, 20 for men and 15 for women
- 44-foot (13-meter) sled pull, 183 pounds (83 kilograms) for the men and 153 pounds (69 kilograms) for the women
The event was won by Lukas Högberg and Laura Horváth.
Event 13: Handstand Walk
[edit]As fast as possible, each competitor performed 50 double-unders with a heavy jump rope and then navigated an obstacle course while walking on their hands. The obstacles consisted of a pylon slalom, up and down a ramp, up and down stairs, and finished with a handstand walk across a set of parallel bars. Each individual obstacle had to be done without falling.
The event was won by Cody Anderson and Brooke Wells.
Event 14: Aeneas
[edit]- Peg board ascents, five for the men and four for the women
- 40 thrusters, 85 pounds (39 kilograms) for the men and 55 pounds (25 kilograms) for the women
- A yoke carry, adding weight every 33 feet (10 meters)
The event was a "chipper," a workout involving multiple exercises done sequentially without returning (as in "chipping away" at the number of repetitions) for the fastest time or as far as possible in the eight-minute time cap. The athletes started with climbing the peg board before moving on the thrusters, a CrossFit movement that is a combination of a front squat and push press in one continuous motion. After the thrusters the competitors picked up a yoke loaded with 425 pounds (193 kilograms) for the men or 345 pounds (156 kilograms) for the women. After 33 feet of carrying the yoke, the athletes had to stop and load their yokes to 565 pounds (256 kilograms) or 405 pounds (184 kilograms) for the men or women respectively. After another 33 feet, they loaded the yokes to 665 pounds (302 kilograms) or 445 pounds (202 kilograms) before carrying it another 33 feet to the finish line.
Having already secured first place overall in the 2018 Games, Mathew Fraser also finished first for this event. The women's event was won by Laura Horváth, who finished the 2018 Games as the second-place finisher overall, 64 points behind the Games winner Tia-Clair Toomey.[25] Toomey finished second in the event. Laura Horvath was named Rookie of the Year.[26]
Team events
[edit]- Bike Deadlift
- The 30s
- Team Battleground
- 1RM Snatch
- Synchro Worm
- Team Triplus
- Handstand Bob
- Bob Sprint
- Bicouplet Relay
- Running Bob
- Lunging Worm
Podium finishers
[edit]Individuals and teams
[edit]| Place | Men[27] | Women [28] | Team[29] |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Mathew Fraser | Tia-Clair Toomey | CrossFit Mayhem Freedom |
| 2nd | Patrick Vellner | Laura Horváth | CrossFit Invictus X |
| 3rd | Lukas Högberg[a] | Katrín Davíðsdóttir | CrossFit OC3 |
Masters men
[edit]| Place[31] | 35–39 | 40–44 | 45–49 | 50–54 | 55–59 | 60+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Kyle Kasperbauer | Neal Maddox | Robert Davis | Cliff Musgrave | Brig Edwards | David Hippensteel |
| 2nd | Alexandre Jolivet | David Levy[b] | Matthew Swift | Mike Egan | Shannon Aiken | Armando Garcia-Besne |
| 3rd | Erast Palkin | Jason Grubb[b] | Nathan Loren | Ron Ortiz | Will Powell | Cal Cherrington |
Masters women
[edit]| Place[31] | 35–39 | 40–44 | 45–49 | 50–54 | 55–59 | 60+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Anna Tobias | Stephanie Roy | Amanda Allen | Eva Thornton | Mary Beth Prodromides | Shaun Havard |
| 2nd | Samantha Briggs | Kelly Friel | Tonia Osborne | Laurie Meschishnick | Bianca Willams | Patty Failla |
| 3rd | Helena Falk | Joey Kimdon | Jolaine Undershute | Linda Elstun | Colleen Fahey | Dolores Jones |
Teens
[edit]| Place[31] | 14–15 Boys | 14–15 Girls | 16–17 Boys | 16–17 Girls |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Tudor Magda | Olivia Sulek | Dallin Pepper | Haley Adams |
| 2nd | Christian Gallaher | Lea Malo | Vincent Ramirez | Kaela Stephano |
| 3rd | Nolan Pedrick | Paige Powers | Dylan Kade | Chloe Smith |
References
[edit]- ^ Benjamin, Cody (August 2, 2018). "2018 CrossFit Games Championships: How to stream and watch, dates, times, events, athletes". CBS Sports.
- ^ "Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey repeat as CrossFit Games champions". CNN. August 6, 2018.
- ^ Clark, Patrick (October 26, 2020). "2021 CrossFit Games Open Dates Announced". Morning Chalk Up.
- ^ a b "Change is coming to the 2018 season". CrossFit Games. November 30, 2017.
- ^ Tao, David (October 16, 2018). "Mat Fraser, Tia-Clair Toomey Win 2018 Reebok CrossFit Games". BarBend.
- ^ Atkin, Nick (August 6, 2018). "CrossFit Games 2018 winners: leader board, results, recap as Mat Fraser, Tia Toomey rule after Two-Stroke Pull, Handstand Walk, Aeneas events". South China Morning Post.
- ^ "Open Success Stories". CrossFit Games. April 16, 2018.
- ^ a b "The 2018 CrossFit Open: Participation By The Numbers". Morning Chalk Up. April 2, 2018.
- ^ a b Pyfferoen, Brian (December 7, 2017). "2018 CrossFit Open, Regional & Games Schedule". The Barbell Spin.
- ^ Boly, Jake (April 2, 2018). "Mat Fraser And Cassidy Lance-Mcwherter Win 2018 CrossFit® Open". BarBend.
- ^ Pyfferoen, Brian (March 28, 2018). "Mat Fraser Dominates the 2018 CrossFit Open". The Barbell Spin.
- ^ a b "Regional Overview". CrossFit Games.
- ^ Hudson, Robbie Wild (5 November 2017). "Latin America Will Get it's [sic] Own Regional for The 2018 CrossFit Games Season". BoxRox.
- ^ Benjamin, Cody (May 31, 2018). "2018 CrossFit Games Regionals: TV, streaming options, dates, athletes for week 3". CBS Sports.
- ^ a b "2018 Games Events". CrossFit Games. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
- ^ "CROSSFIT CRIT REPLACES CYCLOCROSS AT 2018 CROSSFIT GAMES IN WISCONSIN". Cyclocross Magazine. July 31, 2018.
- ^ Boly, Jake (August 13, 2018). "Patrick Vellner Talks Injuries From The 2018 Reebok CrossFit Games". BarBend.
- ^ "Individual Event 3 at The CrossFit Games 2018". BoxRox. July 31, 2018.
- ^ LoFranco, Justin (August 4, 2018). "Sara Sigmundsdottir Withdraws from 2018 CrossFit Games". Morning Chalk Up.
- ^ Nash, Brad (August 3, 2018). "The Aussies Are Putting Up Some Insane Numbers At The Crossfit Games". GQ Magazine.
- ^ "CrossFit Games Leaderboard". CrossFit Games. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
- ^ "Rescue Randy Manikin Making Appearance At 2018 Reebok CrossFit Games". BarBend.com. July 29, 2018.
- ^ Pyfferoen, Brian (August 13, 2018). "Patrick Vellner Bruised His Lung During O-Course Fall". The Barbell Spin.
- ^ Brian Pyfferoen (July 30, 2018). "The Fibonacci Final is Back in 2018". TheBarbellSpin.com.
- ^ "2018 CrossFit Games: Mat Fraser takes home third straight championships, Tia-Clair Toomey defends her title". CBS Sports.
- ^ English, Nick (December 13, 2018). "Laura Horvath Is The 2018 Reebok CrossFit Games' Rookie Of The Year". BarBend.
- ^ "Leaderboard > 2018 > Men". CrossFit Games.
- ^ "Leaderboard > 2018 > Women". CrossFit Games.
- ^ "Leaderboard > 2018 > Team". CrossFit Games.
- ^ Pyfferoen, Brian (August 8, 2018). "Brent Fikowski's Recap of the 2018 CrossFit Games". BarBell Spin.
- ^ a b c Lofranco, Justin (August 5, 2018). "Top 10 Moments from the 2018 CrossFit Games". Morning Chalk Up.
- ^ "Two Masters Athletes Fail Drug Tests From 2018 CrossFit Games". barbend.com. November 8, 2018. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
External links
[edit]- 2018 CrossFit Games Individual events on CrossFit official YouTube channel
- 2018 CrossFit Games
2018 CrossFit Games
View on GrokipediaBackground
Overview and Dates
The CrossFit Games serve as the annual culminating competition in the CrossFit sport, crowning the "Fittest on Earth" across multiple divisions including individuals, teams, masters athletes, and teenagers.[11] The event tests competitors through a series of varied, high-intensity workouts designed to measure overall fitness, with the format kept unpredictable to emphasize broad physical preparedness.[1] The 2018 edition marked the 12th annual CrossFit Games, held from August 1 to 5 at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, representing a return to the venue for the second consecutive year, following events in California in prior seasons (such as the 2016 Games in Carson).[1] This competition capped a season that began with the CrossFit Open, attracting a record 416,000 registered athletes worldwide and funneling top performers through regionals and online qualifiers to select 40 men, 40 women, 40 teams, plus additional qualifiers for masters (240) and teen (80) categories.[12][11] Mathew Fraser secured his third consecutive men's title, while Tia-Clair Toomey claimed her second women's championship; in the team division, CrossFit Mayhem Freedom emerged victorious.[3][13]Venue and Organization
The 2018 CrossFit Games were held at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, a multi-purpose facility selected for its versatile infrastructure capable of accommodating diverse event formats. The center features indoor arenas such as the Coliseum for high-intensity strength and skill-based competitions, as well as expansive outdoor fields and stadiums like the North Park Stadium for endurance and team events, enabling a seamless integration of varied workout environments.[14][15] Organized by CrossFit, Inc., the event was the second year of a multi-year agreement to host the Games in Madison, with Reebok serving as the title sponsor under the official name "2018 Reebok CrossFit Games." The production scale was substantial, drawing an estimated crowd of more than 70,000 spectators over the five-day period from August 1 to 5, highlighting the event's growing popularity as a major fitness spectacle.[16][17] Logistically, the Alliant Energy Center's layout supported efficient event flow by utilizing its 164-acre campus for simultaneous activities, including vendor areas and community zones, while minimizing athlete and spectator transit times between indoor and outdoor spaces. This setup facilitated the Games' demanding schedule without compromising safety or viewing access.[14][18] Madison's selection marked a continuation from the 2017 Games, with the city hosting through 2019 as part of a three-year commitment announced by CrossFit, Inc., to establish a stable, athlete-friendly venue amid the event's expansion.[16][19]Qualification
CrossFit Open
The CrossFit Open served as the initial qualification stage for the 2018 CrossFit Games, functioning as a global online competition accessible to athletes of all skill levels worldwide. Held from February 22 to March 26, 2018, it consisted of five workouts (labeled 18.1 through 18.5) released weekly on Thursdays at 5 p.m. PT, with participants given four days to complete each one and submit their scores via video verification or affiliate validation.[1][20] This format allowed for broad participation without geographic restrictions, emphasizing community involvement and self-testing under standardized conditions. Participation reached an all-time high, with 416,000 athletes registering and competing in at least one workout across individual, team, and age-group divisions.[12] The event introduced no major structural changes from prior years but maintained Rx'd (prescribed) standards for elite competitors alongside scaled options, which modified movements and weights to promote inclusivity for beginners and those building foundational skills, while ensuring the Rx'd path remained the route for Games qualification. Scores were determined by summing an athlete's rank from each workout, with the lowest total rank sum yielding the highest overall placement.[21] The primary purpose of the Open was to provide an equitable entry point, identifying top performers without initial regional bias and filtering talent for the subsequent Regionals stage. Top athletes from each gender and age group advanced based on their final rankings, with qualification slots allocated variably by region—ranging from 15 to 25 individuals per event—to maintain competitive balance and ensure the fittest progressed to in-person testing.[11] This process highlighted emerging talent while fostering worldwide engagement, setting the foundation for the more selective Regionals.Regionals
The Regionals served as the second stage of qualification for the 2018 CrossFit Games, following the online CrossFit Open, where top performers from designated geographic areas competed in person to secure spots at the Games.[11] Athletes who advanced from the Open—typically the top 20 to 40 individuals and teams per Open region, depending on the area's size—participated in these weekend events, which tested a broad range of fitness skills including strength, endurance, gymnastics, and metabolic conditioning.[22] In 2018, the Regionals consisted of nine competitions held over three weekends from May 18–20, May 25–27, and June 1–3, a reduction from the ten regions used in 2017 to increase competition density and balance participant pools across larger areas.[1] The regions included the East (Albany, NY), Atlantic (West Palm Beach, FL), Central (Nashville, TN), South (Salt Lake City, UT), West (Del Mar, CA), Europe (Berlin, Germany), Meridian (Madrid, Spain), Latin America (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), and Pacific (Sydney, Australia).[11] Each regional featured 5 to 7 events designed to challenge athletes holistically, with formats varying slightly by location but emphasizing scalability for individuals, teams (now limited to four members per team, down from six), and adaptive divisions.[1] These events were live-streamed globally via the CrossFit Games website and broadcast partners like CBS Sports Network, allowing broader visibility and fan engagement.[23] Qualification to the Games awarded a total of 40 spots per category: men, women, and teams. Most regions sent the top five individuals and teams (e.g., the five North American regions, Europe, and Pacific), while Meridian sent the top four and Latin America the top one, ensuring the overall total of 40 while accommodating regional disparities in athlete depth.[11] This structure advanced 120 total entries (80 individuals and 40 teams) to the Games, highlighting the competitive stakes as only the elite progressed. Notable performances included two-time defending champion Mat Fraser dominating the Central Regional with five consecutive event wins, securing his fifth straight regional title and underscoring his preeminence among men.[24] Events were officiated by on-site CrossFit-certified judges who enforced movement standards in real time, with provisions for video review by CrossFit headquarters staff to resolve disputes or verify close calls, maintaining integrity across the high-stakes competitions.[25] This judging protocol, combined with the consolidated regional format, aimed to elevate the overall quality and fairness of qualification.[11]Competition Format
Schedule and Broadcast
The 2018 CrossFit Games took place from August 1 to August 5 at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, spanning four competition days with no events scheduled on Thursday, August 2, to allow for athlete recovery. Events were timed to begin in the morning Central Time (CT), typically around 8:30–10:00 a.m., facilitating accessibility for a global audience across multiple time zones. The schedule emphasized a progression from opening challenges to culminating finals, incorporating individual, team, masters, and teenage divisions.[1][2] On Wednesday, August 1, the Games opened with a series of individual events testing endurance, strength, and skill, setting the tone for the competition while introducing athletes to the venue. Friday, August 3, featured mid-competition workouts for individuals and teams from approximately 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. CT, with masters and teenage divisions concluding earlier at 8:30 p.m. CT, focusing on tactical and high-intensity formats. Saturday, August 4, included heats advancing to finals starting at 9:00 a.m. CT and extending to 10:00 p.m. CT for individuals and teams, alongside scaled timings for other divisions, highlighting multi-sport elements and complex movements. Sunday, August 5, wrapped up with closing events from about 9:00 a.m. CT, culminating in awards ceremonies around 5:30–7:00 p.m. CT, determining the overall champions across divisions.[26][27][28][10][2] Broadcast coverage was produced by CrossFit's in-house media team and delivered live across digital platforms for free worldwide access, emphasizing real-time streaming to engage an international viewership. Primary streaming occurred on the CrossFit Games website, Facebook Live, CBSSports.com, and the CBS Sports app (compatible with devices like Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and Chromecast), with full-day coverage from 10:00 a.m. to 9:00–10:00 p.m. CT on most days. Traditional TV included two hours of live broadcasts on CBS on Saturday (1:00–2:00 p.m. ET) and Sunday (12:00–1:00 p.m. ET), plus nightly highlights on CBS Sports Network at 10:00 p.m. ET from August 2–5, and a season recap special on CBS on September 2, 2018, at 5:00 p.m. ET; post-event episodes aired on CBS starting October 15, 2018. International audiences accessed the same free streams without geographic restrictions, supporting CrossFit's global community.[29][2][30]Divisions and Rules
The 2018 CrossFit Games included multiple divisions to ensure broad participation across age groups and formats. The individual division featured separate competitions for men and women aged 18 and older, with no upper age limit (distinct from the masters divisions starting at 35), with 40 athletes qualifying in each gender category through a multi-stage process involving the CrossFit Open, Online Qualifier, and Regionals. Teams competed as four-person co-ed units, requiring at least two men and two women who trained primarily at the same affiliate gym, with 40 teams advancing via the same qualification path.[31][1] Masters athletes, defined as those 35 years and older, competed in gender-specific age groups: 35-39, 40-44, 45-49, 50-54, 55-59, and 60+. Qualification for masters occurred separately through the CrossFit Open—using scaled workout options—and the subsequent Age Group Online Qualifier, with the top 20 athletes per age group and gender advancing directly to the Games. Similarly, the teen divisions encompassed 14-15 and 16-17 age groups for boys and girls, also qualifying via the Open and Age Group Online Qualifier, sending the top 20 per category to the event. These separate pathways for masters and teens allowed for targeted competition without overlapping with the elite individual and team fields.[1][32] The governing rules emphasized fairness and comprehensive fitness testing. Individuals faced 14 varied events over four days, while teams completed 10 events, all designed to assess multiple domains of fitness including strength, endurance, and skill. Scoring was determined by placement in each event, with points awarded from 1 (first place) upward; the athlete or team with the lowest cumulative score won their division. Ties were resolved through head-to-head comparisons across all events where the tied parties competed. All divisions adhered to strict eligibility criteria, including residency-based regional assignments and video submission requirements for earlier stages. Drug testing followed World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) protocols, with random and targeted testing throughout the season to maintain integrity.[31][1] To accommodate physiological differences, events in the masters and teen divisions incorporated adaptations such as lighter implement weights, reduced distances, modified rep schemes, and alternative movements (e.g., knee raises instead of toes-to-bar for younger teens). These scalings preserved the core workout structure while prioritizing safety and accessibility, ensuring competitors could demonstrate fitness relative to their age group without compromising the competitive rigor.[32][33]Individual Competition
Wednesday Events
The Wednesday events at the 2018 CrossFit Games marked the opening day of competition for individual athletes, held on August 1 at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, emphasizing a mix of cycling endurance, gymnastic skill, maximal strength, and prolonged cardio output.[26] These four events set the tone for the week, testing athletes' versatility across modalities while establishing initial leaderboard positions, with reigning champions Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey navigating challenges to position themselves strongly among the 40 men and 40 women qualifiers.[26] Event 1: CritThe Crit served as the day's opener, a criterium-style cycling race where athletes completed 10 laps of a 1,200-meter course on lightweight aluminum Trek bicycles weighing approximately 21 pounds each.[5] The event featured a rolling start with all competitors racing simultaneously in heats determined by seeding, under a 30-minute time cap, highlighting bike handling, pacing, and sustained power output on a technical urban loop that included turns and slight inclines.[5] In the men's division, Swiss athlete Adrian Mundwiler claimed victory in 18:32, edging out James Newbury (18:35.14) and Lukas Högberg (18:36.28), while Mat Fraser placed fourth at 18:36.55; on the women's side, Norway's Kristin Holte led with 19:13, followed by Thuri Helgadottir (19:24) and Whitney Hauser (19:32), with Toomey finishing fifth in 20:02.79.[34] Crashes and mechanical issues affected several athletes, including Patrick Vellner and Noah Ohlsen in the men's field, underscoring the event's risk element beyond pure fitness.[26] Event 2: 30 Muscle-Ups
Following the Crit, athletes tackled 30 ring muscle-ups for time, a pure gymnastics test requiring unbroken or broken sets on standard competition rings, with a 5-minute cap that rewarded efficiency and grip endurance.[5] Competitors started from a hanging position, transitioning through a kip to press out above the rings, and many elite athletes completed the set unbroken to minimize time loss, though fatigue from the prior event influenced breaks for some.[26] Logan Collins topped the men in 1:46, ahead of Samuel Morais (1:55) and Fraser (third, 2:00.16), demonstrating the Canadian's bar muscle-up prowess adapted to rings; in women, Kristi O'Connell (formerly Eramo) won in 2:32.52—her first Games event victory—followed by Toomey (second, 2:33.52) and Katrin Tanja Davidsdottir (2:37).[34] Toomey managed 20 unbroken reps before breaking, showcasing her technical consistency despite visible shoulder strain.[35] Event 3: CrossFit Total
The CrossFit Total evaluated maximal strength across three barbell lifts—back squat, strict shoulder press, and deadlift—where athletes had four minutes per lift to achieve their heaviest successful one-rep max, totaling the combined weight across up to three attempts each, within a 12-minute overall format.[5] Lifts were performed on Eleiko barbells with calibrated plates, starting from empty bars and increasing loads progressively, emphasizing technique under fatigue from earlier events.[8] Toomey dominated the women with a total of 875 pounds (330-pound back squat, 130-pound shoulder press, 415-pound deadlift), narrowly beating Samantha Briggs (865 pounds) and Annie Thorisdottir (855 pounds), after recovering from a failed squat attempt to PR her deadlift.[8] In men, Royce Dunn led with 1,255 pounds, followed by Vellner (1,250 pounds) and Jacob Heppner (1,235 pounds), while Fraser placed eighth at 1,215 pounds (485 back squat, 205 shoulder press, 525 deadlift), bolstering his overall standing through consistent heavy lifts.[34] Vellner's 595-pound deadlift stood out as the heaviest of the day across genders.[26] Event 4: Marathon Row
Closing the day, the Marathon Row challenged athletes to cover exactly 42,195 meters—the marathon distance—on Concept2 rowing machines for time, under a generous 4-hour cap, with all 80 individuals rowing simultaneously in the arena.[5] Hydration and nutrition breaks were permitted, but the monotonous demand tested mental fortitude and aerobic capacity, with monitors displaying splits and totals to fuel competition.[26] Germany's Lukas Esslinger won the men in 2:43:50, ahead of Ben Smith (2:45:12) and Justin Medeiros (2:46:01), while Mexico's Margaux Alvarez took women's gold in 3:00:42, followed by Davidsdottir (3:04:55) and Horvath (3:05:22); Fraser finished 11th at 2:48:36, and Toomey 14th in 3:09:58, both solid but not podium efforts amid widespread fatigue.[34] The event's scale highlighted rowing's role in CrossFit, with top splits dipping below 1:56/500 meters early on.[36] After the four events, Fraser led the men's field with 298 points, narrowly ahead of Lukas Högberg (296), thanks to his balanced performances capped by the Total, while Laura Horvath topped the women at 338 points, with Toomey in third overall for the day at 268 points, setting up intense pursuits in subsequent rounds.[35]
Friday Events
The Friday of the 2018 CrossFit Games, held on August 3 at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, featured three events for the individual division that tested athletes' endurance, strength, and tactical decision-making in varied terrains and formats. These mid-competition workouts shifted focus from the foundational tests of Wednesday to more dynamic challenges incorporating outdoor elements and escalating demands, allowing competitors to showcase strategic pacing and recovery under pressure.[27] Event 5, titled "The Battleground," was an outdoor obstacle course designed to simulate rugged fieldwork, emphasizing carrying capacity, climbing prowess, and agile navigation. Athletes began by dragging a 185-pound Rescue Randy dummy for men (165 pounds for women) across 40 meters while wearing a weighted vest (20 pounds for men, 14 pounds for women), followed by two 15-foot rope climbs, an obstacle-course run incorporating walls, low hurdles, and balance elements, two additional rope climbs, and a final dummy drag of the same distance. The event capped at 11 minutes for men and 12 minutes for women, with penalties for incomplete work, rewarding those who maintained grip strength and efficient transitions to avoid fatigue buildup. Cole Sager won the men's division in 8:35, while rookie Laura Horvath claimed victory in the women's at 9:29, leveraging her climbing background to extend her overall lead.[5][27] Event 6, the "Clean and Jerk Speed Ladder," highlighted barbell cycling speed and power output under progressive loading, structured as three advancing rounds—quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals—with athletes performing clean and jerks at five incrementally heavier weights per round within tight time caps of 1, 2, and 3 minutes, respectively. Men started at 245 pounds in the first round, climbing to 345 pounds in the finals, while women began at 155 pounds and peaked at 225 pounds; success advanced the top 20 to semifinals and top 5 to finals, with scoring based on fastest completion or heaviest successful lifts. This format demanded precise technique to chain reps without rest, as failures could eliminate contenders early. Nick Urankar took the men's win in 1:51, and Amanda Barnhart topped the women's field, demonstrating how strategic weight management could upend standings.[5][27] Event 7, "Fibonacci," drew on the mathematical sequence for rep schemes, challenging upper-body strength, posterior chain power, and overhead stability in a chipper-style workout for time with a 6-minute cap. Competitors completed 5, then 8, then 13 deficit handstand push-ups on parallettes (14-inch deficit for men, 8-inch for women), paired with matching deadlifts using two kettlebells (203 pounds total for men, 124 pounds for women), culminating in an 89-foot overhead lunge holding two kettlebells (53 pounds each for men, 35 pounds for women). The escalating reps tested strategic break management to preserve shoulder endurance, with penalties for unfinished portions. Mat Fraser dominated the men's event, while Katrín Davýsdóttir won the women's in 3:31. Horvath's consistent top-10 finishes across Friday, particularly her Battleground win, solidified her position atop the women's leaderboard, narrowing the gap to defending champion Tia-Clair Toomey heading into the weekend.[5][27][34]Saturday Events
Saturday, August 4, marked the penultimate day of the individual competition at the 2018 CrossFit Games, held at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin. The four events emphasized endurance, strength, and metabolic conditioning, beginning with a multi-discipline triathlon-style workout and progressing to a surprise chipper and paired couplet tests. These events tested athletes' versatility amid accumulating fatigue from the prior days, with defending champions Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey maintaining strong positions while challengers like Patrick Vellner made notable gains.[28] Event 8, Madison Triplus, required athletes to complete a 500-meter swim in Lake Monona, followed by a 1,000-meter paddle on a stand-up paddleboard, and a 2,000-meter run back to the venue, all within a 40-minute cap. The workout highlighted transitions between water and land disciplines, demanding efficient pacing and recovery. In the women's division, Tia-Clair Toomey won with a time of 37:35.01, narrowly ahead of Kristi Eramo at 37:40.33, while Chyna Cho placed third at 39:29.22; Toomey's paddle technique proved decisive in securing the edge. For the men, rookie Dean Linder-Leighton claimed victory in 26:37.51, outpacing Brent Fikowski (26:52.44) and James Newbury (26:52.66) by leveraging a strong paddle segment.[5][28] Event 9, titled Chaos, was an on-site announcement featuring a chipper workout for time capped at 12 minutes: 35 calories on the SkiErg (30 for women), 30 burpees to a bar target (25 for women), 45 single-arm dumbbell overhead squats at 50 pounds (40 reps at 35 pounds for women), 40 single-leg squats (45 for women), 25 box jump-overs over a 42-inch box (36 inches for women), and a 110-foot tumbler pull at 400 pounds (300 pounds for women). The event's mystery element added psychological pressure, combining awkward movements like the weighted sled pull with high-rep gymnastics. Katrin Davidsdottir won the women's event in 8:19, leading wire-to-wire and gaining ground on the leaders. Patrick Vellner took the men's win in 9:19.86, using his performance to close the gap on Fraser in the overall standings.[5][28][37] Events 10 and 11 consisted of Bicouplet 2 followed immediately by Bicouplet 1, each scored separately with 6-minute caps and a 1-minute transition. Bicouplet 2 involved descending reps of 12-9-6 snatches (135 pounds for men, 85 pounds for women) and bar muscle-ups. Willy Georges won the men's division in 3:03.67, marking a breakout for the French athlete, while Camille Leblanc-Bazinet dominated the women's event in 3:02.27, excelling on the muscle-ups. Bicouplet 1 then required 21-15-9 reps of snatches (85 pounds for men, 55 pounds for women) and chest-to-bar pull-ups. Rasmus Andersen secured the men's victory in 4:03, with Georges placing second; Kara Saunders won the women's at 3:39.00, showcasing her pulling strength. Toomey swept both couplets for women, earning maximum points and extending her lead to 114 over Laura Horvath.[5][28] The day's events amplified fatigue as athletes approached the final deciders, with Toomey solidifying her dominance by gaining 160 points across the couplets alone. In the men's field, Vellner's Chaos win and consistent top finishes propelled him into contention, narrowing Fraser's lead to 92 points heading into Sunday, setting up a tense conclusion.[28][37]Sunday Events
The final day of the 2018 CrossFit Games, held on August 5 at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, featured three decisive events for the individual competitors, culminating in the crowning of the Fittest Man and Woman on Earth.[10] Reigning champions Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey entered the day with substantial leads—Fraser 138 points ahead of Patrick Vellner and Toomey 114 points ahead of Laura Horvath—setting the stage for a dramatic close to the competition.[10] These events tested a blend of endurance, skill, and strength, with the outcomes solidifying Fraser's third consecutive title and Toomey's second straight victory.[13] Event 12: Two-Stroke Pull began the day with athletes completing five rounds for time of a 300-meter run, 20 calories (men) or 15 calories (women) on an Assault Bike, and a 44-foot sled pull loaded to 183 pounds for men and 153 pounds for women, under an 18-minute cap.[5] The event emphasized sustained pulling power and cardiovascular capacity, as competitors alternated between running, cycling, and dragging the sled across the arena floor. In the men's division, Sweden's Lukas Högberg claimed the win in 13:36.40, edging out Canada's Brent Fikowski (13:55.60), while Fraser finished fourth at 14:06.03, maintaining his overall lead without risking his position.[10][13] For the women, Hungary's rookie Laura Horvath dominated with a time of 15:12.38, but Toomey placed seventh at 15:51.08, her lead shrinking slightly as Horvath gained ground.[10][13] Event 13: Handstand Walk shifted focus to gymnastics and balance, requiring 50 heavy-rope double-unders followed by navigating an obstacle course in a handstand position, including a pylon slalom, incline ramp, stairs, and parallel bars, capped at four minutes.[5] This test rewarded precision under fatigue, with falls resetting progress on the course. Cody Anderson took the men's victory in 1:29.42, but Fraser's third-place finish of 1:44.99 mathematically clinched his championship, as he secured enough points to make a Vellner comeback impossible.[10][13] In the women's field, Brooke Wells won in 1:57.78, while Toomey finished sixth at 2:12.09, her handstand skills tested but her overall margin holding firm against Horvath's strong showing.[10][13] The competition concluded with Event 14: Aeneas, a grueling chipper for time under an eight-minute cap: five pegboard ascents (four for women), 40 thrusters at 85 pounds (men) or 55 pounds (women), and three escalating 33-foot yoke carries totaling 425-565-665 pounds for men and 345-405-445 pounds for women.[5] Named after the Trojan hero carrying his father to safety, the event symbolized the Games' theme of endurance amid chaos, blending upper-body pulling, barbell work, and heavy lifting. Fraser powered through to win the men's division in 3:56.47, capping his dominant week with a final surge.[10][13] Horvath again excelled for the women, finishing first in 3:49.96, but Toomey's second-place time of 3:55.45—just 5.49 seconds behind—ensured her repeat title by 64 points, as the duo's neck-and-neck battle highlighted the event's intensity.[10][13]Team Competition
Event Descriptions
The team division of the 2018 CrossFit Games consisted of 4-person co-ed teams (two men and two women) competing in 11 events across Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, a slightly reduced number compared to the individual track to accommodate group dynamics and strategic planning. Events were designed to highlight teamwork through formats such as relays, synchronized movements, and shared loads, differing from the solo efforts in individual competitions where athletes like Mat Fraser tackled similar workouts independently (detailed in the Individual Competition sections). Teams had to divide tasks based on strengths, communicate transitions, and manage pacing collectively, with load-sharing in multi-athlete lifts like deadlifts and worm carries adding layers of coordination not present in solo formats.[38] On Wednesday, the opening day featured the Bike Deadlift and The 30s. In Bike Deadlift, teams completed three rounds of individual 1,600-meter BikeErg efforts followed by 25 collective deadlifts at 715 pounds, requiring seamless handoffs and synchronized pulling to maintain momentum under a 16-minute cap. The 30s challenged teams with 30 synchronized muscle-ups for all four members, then pairs (male-male and female-female) performing 30 back squats (men at 275 pounds, women at 205 pounds) and 30 push presses (men at 185 pounds, women at 135 pounds), capped by 30 box jump-overs (42 inches for men, 36 inches for women), all within 16 minutes; this event underscored pair synchronization to avoid penalties for asynchrony.[38] Friday's events—Team Battleground, 1RM Snatch, and Synchro Worm—emphasized endurance, strength, and precision. Team Battleground involved a yoke and litter carry, four rope climbs per athlete split before and after an obstacle-course run, completed as a unit in 16 minutes, where teams shared the load on carries to simulate tactical support. The 1RM Snatch allowed female pairs four minutes to establish their heaviest lifts, followed by males, with the team's score as the total; this tested strategic order and spotting without direct comparison to individual snatch ladders. Synchro Worm required five rounds of 12 synchronized handstand push-ups and 12 synchronized GHD sit-ups per mixed-gender pair, plus 15 worm squats (20-pound ball for men, 14-pound for women), in 16 minutes, highlighting communication for timing in pair movements to prevent fatigue imbalances.[38] Saturday brought Team Triplus, Handstand Bob, Bob Sprint, and Bicouplet Relay, focusing on multi-modal relays and pushes. Team Triplus had each athlete swim 500 meters individually, followed by a team sled paddle of 500 meters and a 2,000-meter run, capped at 40 minutes, allowing teams to strategize swimmer rotations for efficiency. Handstand Bob consisted of three gender-specific rounds (males first, then females) of 20/15 calories on the rower and bike, handstand-walk courses, and 44-foot Big Bob pushes, in 12 minutes, with load-sharing on the weighted push emphasizing transitions. The short Bob Sprint required all four to push a 132-foot Big Bob in two minutes, testing immediate collective power. Bicouplet Relay divided work sequentially: first female did 21-15-9 snatches (55 pounds) and pull-ups, first male the same (85 pounds), second female 12-9-6 snatches (85 pounds) and bar muscle-ups, second male likewise (135 pounds), in 19 minutes, rewarding relay pacing and gender-balanced progression.[38] Sunday's Running Bob and Lunging Worm served as capstone events blending cardio and strength. Running Bob featured five rounds of a 300-meter run per athlete plus a 50-foot Big Bob pull for the team, in 16 minutes, where communication ensured even pulling shares during runs. Lunging Worm culminated with descending reps of 36-24-12 worm thrusters and burpees over the worm, advancing via lunges between sets, in 18 minutes; this all-together format demanded load distribution to sustain intensity, as exemplified by Mayhem Freedom's coordinated transitions that minimized downtime in similar group carries throughout the Games. These events collectively showcased how teams like Mayhem Freedom leveraged pre-planned strategies for synchronization and recovery, setting them apart from individual self-reliance.[38][39]Results and Standings
In the team division of the 2018 CrossFit Games, CrossFit Mayhem Freedom claimed first place with a total of 900 points, marking a dominant performance led by captain Rich Froning Jr. and teammates Lindy Barber, Matt Hewett, and Tasia Percevecz.[9][40] The competition featured 11 scored events, where teams accumulated points based on their finishing positions, with the winner of each event receiving 100 points and placements descending accordingly.[5] CrossFit Mayhem Freedom excelled through consistent top finishes, securing multiple event victories such as the Bike Deadlift and Team Battleground, which contributed to their overall lead without any major setbacks.[41] In second place, CrossFit Invictus X tallied 788 points, driven by athletes Sam Dancer, Jenn Dancer, Kaitlyn Kassis, and Holden Rethwill, while CrossFit OC3 rounded out the podium in third with 776 points, highlighted by their steady top-10 results across nearly all events from athletes Colin Cartee, Joe Piersanti, Taylor Williamson, and Andrea Nisler.[9][42][43][44] This victory represented CrossFit Mayhem's first team championship since 2016, reclaiming the title after a one-year absence from the top spot.[40] Additionally, the Affiliate Cup, determined by the combined points from both team and individual competitors affiliated with each gym, was awarded to CrossFit Mayhem for their third overall win in the honor.[45]| Rank | Team Name | Total Points | Key Athletes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CrossFit Mayhem Freedom | 900 | Rich Froning Jr., Lindy Barber, Matt Hewett, Tasia Percevecz |
| 2 | CrossFit Invictus X | 788 | Sam Dancer, Jenn Dancer, Kaitlyn Kassis, Holden Rethwill |
| 3 | CrossFit OC3 | 776 | Colin Cartee, Joe Piersanti, Taylor Williamson, Andrea Nisler |
Other Divisions
Masters Competitions
The Masters competitions at the 2018 CrossFit Games featured athletes aged 35 and older, divided into six age groups for both men and women: 35–39, 40–44, 45–49, 50–54, 55–59, and 60+.[1] Each division included the top 20 qualifiers from the Age Group Online Qualifier, emphasizing experienced competitors who demonstrated resilience and adaptability in high-intensity functional fitness challenges.[25] These athletes shared the same competition schedule as the individual division but with scaled modifications to weights, repetitions, and movements to suit age-related capabilities while maintaining the core elements of strength, endurance, and skill.[46] Events for Masters athletes mirrored the individual format across five days, including workouts like the Crit (a multi-discipline test combining biking, gymnastics, weightlifting, and rowing), the CrossFit Total (one-rep max back squat, strict press, and deadlift), and specialized age-group battles such as the AG Battleground (featuring runs, handstand walks, double-unders, and squat snatches with reduced loads, e.g., 135 lb for men 35–39 versus 225 lb for elites).[5] Other highlights included the Rope and Yoke (rope climbs and yoke carries scaled for distance and height) and a marathon row, where modifications ensured accessibility without diminishing competitive intensity— for instance, lighter yokes at 405 lb for men 50–54 compared to 665 lb for elites.[47] These adaptations allowed older athletes to showcase technical proficiency and mental fortitude, often drawing crowds for displays of lifelong dedication to fitness.[45] The competitions underscored the depth of talent in the Masters field, with winners exemplifying consistent performance across diverse tests of metabolic conditioning, gymnastics, and heavy lifting. Podium finishers in each division are listed below.Men's Podium Finishers
| Age Group | 1st Place | 2nd Place | 3rd Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35–39 | Kyle Kasperbauer (United States) | Alexandre Jolivet (France) | Justin King (United States) |
| 40–44 | Neal Maddox (United States) | Shawn Ramirez (United States) | David Levy (United States) |
| 45–49 | Robert Davis (United States) | Matthew Swift (United States) | Brent Maier (United States) |
| 50–54 | Cliff Musgrave (United States) | Mike Egan (United States) | Calvin Brinson (United States) |
| 55–59 | Brig Edwards (United States) | Shannon Aiken (United States) | Will Powell (United States) |
| 60+ | David Hippensteel (United States) | Armando Garcia-Besne (United States) | Cal Cherrington (United States) |
Women's Podium Finishers
| Age Group | 1st Place | 2nd Place | 3rd Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35–39 | Anna Tobias (United States) | Samantha Briggs (United Kingdom) | Rebecca Voigt (United States) |
| 40–44 | Stephanie Roy (Canada) | Kelly Friel (United States) | Helen Harding (United Kingdom) |
| 45–49 | Amanda Allen (Australia) | Tonia Osborne (United States) | Kylie Massi (Australia) |
| 50–54 | Eva Thornton (South Africa) | Laurie Meschishnick (Canada) | Linda Elstun (United States) |
| 55–59 | Mary Beth Prodromides (United States) | Bianca Williams (United States) | Colleen Fahey (United States) |
| 60+ | Patty Failla (United States) | Shaun Havard (United States) | Dolores Jones (United States) |
Teenage Competitions
The teenage competitions at the 2018 CrossFit Games featured four divisions for athletes aged 14–17: boys 14–15, girls 14–15, boys 16–17, and girls 16–17, with the top 20 qualifiers from each advancing via the Age Group Online Qualifier.[25] These divisions emphasized youth development by offering scaled workouts that reduced loads, distances, and complexities compared to the adult events—for instance, lighter barbells for lifts, shorter rope climbs, and abbreviated cardio segments—to prioritize safety and technique while preserving CrossFit's core principles of varied functional movements.[5] The events were woven into the main Games schedule at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, often paired with masters competitions for efficiency, spanning workouts like the Rope and Yoke carry, Age Group Chipper, and strict press max efforts.[5] In the Boys 14–15 division, Tudor Magda of the United States emerged as champion with 678 points, securing multiple event wins including the Doubles & Oly complex and handstand walk, ahead of second-place finisher Christian Gallaher and third-place Nolan Pedrick.[57] Similarly, 14-year-old Olivia Sulek from the United States dominated the Girls 14–15 division, earning 642 points to claim the title—the youngest Games winner in any division at the time—with Lea Malo in second and Paige Powers in third.[58][59] The Boys 16–17 division saw Dallin Pepper of the United States take first place overall, demonstrating consistent top finishes across the 11 events, followed by Vincent Ramirez in second and Dylan Kade in third.[60] Haley Adams also from the United States swept the Girls 16–17 division with 1080 points, capturing nine of the 11 events in a historic performance for the age group, while Kaela Stephano placed second and Chloe Smith third.[61][62] These competitions underscored CrossFit's commitment to nurturing young talent, with podium finishers often progressing to higher levels; for example, several 2018 teen athletes later qualified for individual divisions, highlighting the divisions' role as a foundational pathway to elite competition.[45]Results and Podium
Individual Podium Finishers
Mathew Fraser of the United States claimed his third consecutive title as the Fittest Man on Earth at the 2018 CrossFit Games, amassing 1,162 points across the 14 events and securing victory by a record margin of 220 points over second place.[4] Fraser demonstrated consistent excellence, finishing no lower than 11th in any event and securing multiple top-five placements, including an eighth-place finish in the CrossFit Total with a combined lift of 1,215 pounds.[63] His performance underscored his versatility, leading the field from the opening event and maintaining an insurmountable lead entering the final day. Patrick Vellner of Canada earned second place with 942 points, marking his third consecutive podium finish through strong showings in endurance-based workouts like the Marathon Row, where he placed third.[4] The battle for third was decided by a tiebreaker, as Lukas Högberg of Sweden and Brent Fikowski of Canada both tallied 886 points; Högberg secured bronze via his event win in the Two-Stroke Pull, edging out Fikowski's best finish of second in that workout.[10][4] In the women's division, Tia-Clair Toomey of Australia defended her title, earning 1,154 points for her second straight victory as the Fittest Woman on Earth and tying the record for most consecutive wins.[7] Toomey excelled with two event wins and consistent top finishes, with no finish worse than 14th, dominating strength and gymnastics tests such as the 30 Muscle-Ups, where she set a time of 2:07.78 for second place.[64] Laura Horvath of Hungary, in her Games debut, took silver with 1,090 points, highlighted by a second-place finish in the Crit and a victory in the Battleground event that propelled her into contention early.[7] Katrín Tanja Davíðsdóttir of the United States rounded out the podium in third with 1,020 points, leveraging her experience from two prior titles to post consistent top-10 results, including a third-place finish in the Marathon Row.[7] The full top 10 individual finishers provided context for the depth of competition, with tight point spreads in the mid-pack reflecting the parity among elite athletes.| Rank | Men | Country | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mathew Fraser | United States | 1,162 |
| 2 | Patrick Vellner | Canada | 942 |
| 3 | Lukas Högberg | Sweden | 886 |
| 4 | Brent Fikowski | Canada | 886 |
| 5 | Björgvin Karl Guðmundsson | Iceland | 834 |
| 6 | Noah Ohlsen | United States | 786 |
| 7 | Cole Sager | United States | 760 |
| 8 | Rasmus Andersen | United Arab Emirates | 734 |
| 9 | Jonne Koski | Finland | 730 |
| 10 | Scott Panchik | United States | 712 |
| Rank | Women | Country | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tia-Clair Toomey | Australia | 1,154 |
| 2 | Laura Horvath | Hungary | 1,090 |
| 3 | Katrín Tanja Davíðsdóttir | United States | 1,020 |
| 4 | Kara Saunders | Australia | 1,006 |
| 5 | Annie Thorisdottir | Iceland | 989 |
| 6 | Samantha Briggs | United Kingdom | 954 |
| 7 | Sara Sigmundsdóttir | Iceland | 937 |
| 8 | Thuri Helgadóttir | Iceland | 910 |
| 9 | Kristin Holte | Norway | 897 |
| 10 | Camilla Ronne | Denmark | 884 |
Team and Affiliate Cup Winners
In the team competition at the 2018 CrossFit Games, CrossFit Mayhem Freedom claimed first place, marking their third overall victory in the team division and demonstrating consistent dominance across the events.[3][45] The team's roster included captain Richard Froning Jr., Lindy Barber, Matt Hewett, and Tasia Percevecz, who contributed to a wire-to-wire lead that began with a win in the opening event.[66][39] CrossFit Invictus X secured second place, finishing just behind Mayhem Freedom with strong performances in multiple disciplines.[3] The roster featured Jenn Dancer, Kaitlyn Kassis, Sam Dancer, and Holden Rethwill, highlighting the gym's depth in both male and female athletes.[43] Rounding out the podium, CrossFit OC3 took third place in their first appearance on the Games team podium.[3] The team consisted of Colin Cartee (captain), Andrea Nisler, Benjamin Kuebel, Taylor Williamson, and Joe Piersanti, relying on balanced contributions to achieve nine top-10 finishes across the weekend.[67][44] The Affiliate Cup, awarded to the CrossFit-affiliated gym with the strongest collective performance, was won by CrossFit Mayhem Freedom, securing their third title in this category.[45] This accolade recognizes the gym's success through the combined efforts of its athletes in both individual and team competitions at the Games. The points system aggregated rankings from the top individual athletes affiliated with each gym—typically the highest-placing men and women—along with any qualified team's score, emphasizing overall gym representation and depth. Mayhem Freedom's victory underscored their program's ability to produce high-caliber performers across divisions.[45]Prize Money Distribution
The total prize purse for the 2018 CrossFit Games across all divisions was $2.6 million.[68] In the individual divisions, the top 20 men and women received guaranteed payouts based on final standings, with additional bonuses awarded to the top three finishers in each of the 11 events ($3,000 for first, $2,000 for second, and $1,000 for third). The overall structure was as follows: first place earned $300,000, second $100,000, third $75,000, fourth $50,000, fifth through eighth $35,000/27,000/$25,000 respectively, and ninth through 20th decreasing from $23,000 to $7,000. Mat Fraser (men) and Tia-Clair Toomey (women), the overall champions, each received $300,000 in base prize money plus event bonuses, bringing their totals to $312,000 and $313,000 respectively.[31][69]| Placement | Individual Prize (Men/Women) |
|---|---|
| 1st | $300,000 |
| 2nd | $100,000 |
| 3rd | $75,000 |
| 4th | $50,000 |
| 5th | $35,000 |
| 6th | $30,000 |
| 7th | $27,000 |
| 8th | $25,000 |
| 9th-20th | $23,000 to $7,000 (decreasing) |